How Mapping, Cadastral and Land Registry organizations in developing countries can costeffectively assure the quality and reliability of their Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI)

Fabio Bittencourt, Jaana Makela

Spatineo Inc. Finland

The volume of spatial data collected keeps increasing rapidly with ever more powerful and more detailed ways for observing and simulating our environment and the human behavior. Continuously available Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs) are required to create usable information from the vast amount of data by effectively
querying and using it from a site possibly located on the other side of the world. A good SDI makes it possible to discover, filter, acquire and interact with spatial data required for a particular use in a reliable, efficient and easy-to-use manner.

Event: Land Governance in an Interconnected World_Annual World Bank Conference on Land and Poverty_2018

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Document type:How Mapping, Cadastral and Land Registry organizations in developing countries can costeffectively assure the quality and reliability of their Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) (368 kB - pdf)